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May
18, 2007
When
Default Comes
by Gary North, Ph.D.
Debt
is an inescapable concept. It is never a question
of debt or no debt. It is always a question of
which kind of debt, owed to whom, when.
The modern economy is addicted to government
debt by way of central banking debt. The system is
self-reinforcing. Governments spend more money and
make more unfunded promises than taxes can fund.
So, governments turn to debt as a way to make up
the shortfall. To keep interest rates low,
governments license privately owned central banks
to create money in order to buy government debt.
This has been the pattern ever since the creation
of the Bank of England in 1694.
Central banks create money when they purchase
government debt, which is mainly what they invest
in. This adds new money to the economy: monetary
inflation. To eliminate all government debt, as the
United States did in only one year, 1835, the
central bank would have to sell government debt and
purchase some other asset to replace it. Otherwise,
the bank's sale of government debt to the public or
to the government (debt reduction) would shrink the
money supply.
For a central bank to fold up shop and go away,
it would have to sell all of its assets. This would
create price deflation on a massive scale. It would
create a depression far worse than the Great
Depression of the 1930's. This is why, once begun,
the central banking system is self-reinforcing. It
is like an addictive drug. It means lifetime
employment for the pushers: central bankers.
The modern system of debt-based money is
therefore as close to politically inescapable as
anything in the modern world -- even the welfare
state. The modern world is addicted to central bank
debt. In theory, central bank debt is not
inescapable. Once begun, however, it is politically
inescapable. The organization of debt into money is
politically irreversible short of what Ludwig von
Mises called the crack-up boom: the breakdown of
money in mass inflation. It leads to ever-greater
monetary inflation.
This is a worldwide phenomenon. Around the
world, central banks control national monetary
systems. A free market in money is universally
opposed by politicians, academics, and of course
commercial bankers, who want a lender of last
resort to protect them from bank runs by their
depositors.
DEBT WITHOUT END
The United States government is the largest
debtor in history. From all over the world, but
especially from Asia, money is flowing in to buy
Treasury debt. This money is from central banks,
mainly -- money created by government-licensed
counterfeiting operations.
If this money were going into the U.S. stock
market, Americans would at least be the
beneficiaries of better tools of production. They
would not be laying up wealth in their old age.
Instead, foreign central banks would be doing that:
establishing ownership of wealth-producing assets.
But central bankers are not investing their own
money or depositors' money. They are investing
recently counterfeited money. They buy government
promises to pay. It is a gigantic con job between
government-licensed counterfeiters and elected
liars who know the debts will never be paid
off.
You and I are caught in the middle.
Here is how the system works. Foreign central
bank-produced counterfeit money is used by foreign
central banks to buy Federal Reserve-produced
counterfeit money, which is then used to buy a
large chunk of the U.S. government's debt. No one
expects the debt to be paid off. All that anyone
expects is interest payments.
The #1 principle of national government debt is
this: "Old debt must be rolled over, not repaid."
The idea that national government debt must ever be
repaid is considered ludicrous -- by bankers,
voters, politicians, and academic economists. This
assumption lies at the heart of the modern
political order. We have bet the political order on
this assumption. It is a false assumption. As King
David wrote 3,000 years ago: "The wicked borroweth,
and payeth not again" (Psalm 37:21a).
What is legitimate in one realm -- private debt
-- is not legitimate in another realm: government
debt. Private debt gets paid off by individual
debtors. Government debt is perpetual.
Let me explain the logic of the two realms.
First, debt is correctly seen as the engine of
wealth creation in the private markets, which it
can be when it is used to purchase tools of
production. Second, debt is also regarded as the
engine of prosperity in private markets when it is
used to purchase consumer goods. This position is
much less defendable than the first, but if
consumers want to do this, there is nothing morally
wrong, so long as they repay the debt.
Then the defense of productive debt in private
markets is applied to the government. Here, the
logic of debt breaks down. Would you loan money to
a known counterfeiter? Only if the counterfeiter is
the government. To lend money to a counterfeiter is
to guarantee repayment in depreciating
currency.
The fact is, the modern economy is based on
money lent to a debtor who is in league with the
largest counterfeiter on earth: the Federal Reserve
System. These days, the FED is not cranking the
digital printing press at a high rate to buy U.S.
government debt. This is because other
counterfeiters are doing it for the FED. The Bank
of China is producing fiat money at a rate above
15% per annum. It is then taking billions of
dollars worth of this newly created money to buy
the debts of its trading partners' governments,
including the United States.
The world's economy runs on officially
counterfeit money. Technological innovation is
accelerating worldwide, but this innovation does
not require counterfeit money. Hundreds of millions
of Chinese and Indians are moving off the once
collectivized farms and heading for cities. They
are moving out of the world of 1950's-era
socialism. This is highly productive for them and
for consumers all over the world, but it did not
require counterfeit money to make possible this
transition. It required only a reduction of
government control over the economy.
Asian central bankers are well aware that the
U.S. government has no intention to pay off its
debt. They also know that the Federal Reserve
System stands ready to fund the U.S. government's
budget by creating fiat money. But Asian bankers
seem not to care. Why should they? They are buying
this debt with fiat money. They buy dollars. They
then buy T-bills. This money is then spent by the
U.S. government. The recipients of the U.S.
government's money then buy Asian currencies to buy
Asian products. This helps the Asian economies to
grow.
But couldn't the Asian central bankers just buy
the government debt of their own nations? Couldn't
they eliminate the middlemen, namely, the U.S.
government and U.S. consumers? Of course they
could. But we are still living in a world of
mercantilist economics. It is as if Adam Smith's
Wealth of Nations had never been written. In the
world of Asian central banking and politics,
mercantilist economics rules supreme. The way to
wealth, they believe, is by letting foreign
governments run up huge debts that will never be
repaid in order for foreigners to buy consumer
goods exported from Asia.
You may think: "Wait a minute. This means giving
away valuable consumer goods to foreigners today as
a way to get rich in future depreciated money. This
is nutty." If so, you have obviously been
influenced by the logic of the free market. Asian
policy-makers haven't.
While the world is getting rich through the
efforts of inventors, entrepreneurs, savers, and
day laborers who are not part of governments, it is
operated in terms of digits -- counterfeit money --
that are controlled by an alliance of national
politicians and private central bankers. These
digits keep multiplying, and every one of them
represents a debt.
Money today is based on debt. To repay this debt
would require a massive contraction of money back
to gold and silver. This process would create a
massive depression. So, government debts are not
intended to be repaid.
- "The wicked borroweth, and payeth not
again."
But to keep the game going, there must be the
illusion of repayment. There must be debt
rollovers. There must be prompt payment of
interest. There must be official solvency.
In short, there must be widespread acceptance of
an illusion.
WHEN THE DEBTOR CONTROLS THE
CURRENCY
Governments deal in illusion. This is their
two-fold specialty: illusion and force.
Individuals monitor their own level of debt.
They are careful not to let their debt load get
beyond their ability to repay. They do not let
themselves get into a position of having to
default. They know that bankruptcy is a painful
option. They know that creditors can repossess
every mortgaged item they own. This is why the
household debt payment/disposable income ratio has
risen very slowly since 1980.
In contrast is the United States government. It
keeps rolling up massive debts, year by year. It
has on on-budget debt of almost $9 trillion, plus
an off-budget debt in the range of $70
trillion.
There is no way that this can be paid off with
money that possesses today's purchasing power
unless political steps are taken today to stop the
expansion of debt. But no such steps are ever
taken. Politicians have no incentive to stop making
promises. The unfunded liability keeps growing.
Because nobody can foreclose on the U.S.
government, politicians have no incentive to create
a schedule for repaying the government's debt. They
would be thrown out of office if they suggested
that the expansion of future obligations must cease
until a means of repayment is set up. Remember the
rule:
- "Old debt must be rolled over, not
repaid."
The illusion of repayment must be maintained. It
will be maintained, nation by nation, all over the
world. It will be maintained by the creation of
more counterfeit money. Your check will be in the
mail -- or deposited directly into your account.
You will get paid. Have no fear.
The illusion of solvency of the government will
be maintained by the insolvency of the
currency.
In the Soviet Union, there was a common saying
among the workers: "The government pretends to pay
us, and we pretend to work." The result was the
nation's bankruptcy in 1991. The USSR could no
longer service its debt of about $60 billion to the
West. Today, Russia's central bank has something in
the range of $350 billion in IOU's from Western
governments. That's what oil and natural gas can do
for a government.
Russia's central bankers are now caught in the
absurdity of mercantilist economics. The government
has sold off Russia's energy assets in exchange for
Western governments' promise to pay counterfeit
money. Dumb.
And so it goes, nation by nation. The
politicians and central bankers finance the sale of
valuable present goods in exchange for promises to
pay counterfeit money years in the future.
How will all this end? Poorly. In what form?
There are various possible scenarios.
- 1. When there is an interbank payments
crisis -- gridlock -- due to an unforeseen
event, such as an airborne anthrax attack on New
York City or London or both.
- 2. When the government's bills come due and
tax revenues don't.
- 3. When interest rates soar, causing a
depression and widespread private
bankruptcies.
- 4. When mass inflation depreciates the major
nations' currency systems.
- 5. When old people cannot survive on the
income they have been promised, and must return
to their children's households for relief.
The international currency system is based on
two primary factors: (1) central banks'
counterfeiting operations; (2) debt-based money.
The first guarantees long-term price inflation:
debt servicing with depreciating money. The second
prevents any long-term reduction of government debt
that serves as central bank reserves, i.e.,
monetary deflation. This is a ratchet upward in the
government debt markets of the world.
DEBTORS AND CREDITORS
We are all debtors. We are all creditors. The
political question is: Which way will we vote? As
debtors or creditors?
I think most voters vote as debtors. They feel
the pressure of debt right now. They do not think
of themselves as long-term creditors: pensioners,
Social Security members, future Medicare
recipients. In a choice between a little inflation
vs. deflation (personal bankruptcy), they will
choose inflation. They want to be able to meet
their monthly payments, even if this means
accepting long-term depreciating money. They fear
next month more than they fear age 65.
One way to defend yourself against depreciating
money is by accepting long-term debt. Consider your
mortgage. Depending on your age, you probably still
owe money for the home you live in. If you sell it,
you will probably buy another one. You will use
debt to purchase it. If you buy a nicer home, you
will owe more on it than you owe on the one you are
living in now.
You may have made a decision to spend your life
in debt. Tens of millions of people do. I know I
have. I am not a net debtor, but I plan always to
have a mortgage. Why? Because I do not trust the
U.S. dollar. I am a creditor: Social Security. I
have been promised a lifetime of income in dollars.
I want to be able to do something useful with these
dollars. Paying off a fixed-interest mortgage is
something useful.
In other words, I have seen that I am both a
creditor and a debtor. I would like to break even
on the deal. A fixed-rate mortgage should allow me
to do better than break even. Of course, I will be
a lifetime net loser. I paid into a retirement
system that is a gigantic chain letter. I would be
far better off today if I had invested the money
that I paid into Social Security. But what's gone
is gone. I must make my decision today based on
conditions today. I think I will be better off
using my Social Security income to pay off a
mortgage.
There are people my age or older who own their
homes debt-free. These people grew up in a
different generation from those starting families
today. They either remember the Great Depression,
as my parents do, or they grew up in households run
by people who remember it, as I did. They know the
stories of families that were evicted from their
homes for non-payment of their mortgages. They may
even know the true horror stories: families that
were evicted from their farms for non-payment, yet
who simultaneously lost everything they had in the
bank when the local bank went bankrupt. They were
wiped out as debtors, and they were also wiped out
as creditors. These people learned that debt can be
destructive. They decided early to avoid all but
mortgage debt, and to pay off their mortgages
rapidly.
They learned the wrong lesson. They should have
bought one or two rental houses per year, using
debt. They would now own 40 to 80 homes, mostly
debt-free, each worth $250,000. They did not
recognize that a new era had dawned after 1940: an
era of irreversible price inflation. They did not
buy appreciating assets using borrowed money.
CONCLUSION
Like addicts, we are trapped in the modern
debt-based economy. Every institution is part of
this web of debt. Some debt is productive.
Government debt is unproductive. Central bank debt
is addictive.
With governments and central banks in charge of
money, monetary inflation is inevitable. This would
not be true in a free market for money, where banks
would not be allowed to violate contracts with
their depositors and suspend payment in gold or
silver coins.
We therefore seek ways to protect ourselves
against the guaranteed inflation of central
banking. Yet the obvious way to protect ourselves
from depreciating money is to take on long-term,
fixed-rate debt. This is why the organization of
debt into money is self-reinforcing. The
individual's best defense -- long-term debt --
extends the central banking system.
In 1949, Ludwig von Mises identified the end
result of the policy of central banking: mass
inflation. Prices rise, and this gets built into
the economy's long-term contracts: a price premium.
He wrote:
- It is necessary to realize that the price
premium is the outgrowth of speculations
anticipating changes in the money relation. What
induces it, in the case of the expectation that
an inflationary trend will keep on going, is
already the first sign of that phenomenon which
later, when it becomes general, is called
"flight into real values" and finally produces
the crack-up boom and the crash of the monetary
system concerned.
The destruction of purchasing power through
monetary inflation, as well as the boom-bust cycle,
is the product of the government-central bank
alliance. There is no pain-free way out of the
addiction to fiat money. This is why neither
politicians nor central bankers have any intention
of paying off the national debt. They see debt as
forever.
I do not. Debts can be paid off through mass
inflation. I think this is the way they will be
paid off. Conclusion: don't be a long-term creditor
for very long.
Gary
North Archive
Dr.
Gary North earned a Ph.D. in history and is one of
America's keenest economic analysts and
commentators. He supports the Austrian school of
economics and is a previous assistant to
libertarian congressman Dr. Ron Paul. Visit his
website at http://garynorth.com.
To
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